Millennium Musings
Paul
E. Peterson As every
schoolchild once knew, events associated with two specific dates
1455 and 1517 decisively transformed the educational institutions
of the West. The invention of the Gutenberg printing press undermined
the monopoly on learning exercised by the medieval monastery. No longer
was the examination of ancient manuscripts laboriously transcribed and
illustrated by devout monks, an all but exclusive province of those who
held the keys to the heavenly kingdom. Once the Bible went into mass production,
peasants and tradesfolk no longer learned their spiritual lessons just
by contemplating the statuary adorning cathedral doors. Bible reading
was integral to the Protestant Revolution that swept northern Europe in
the 16th century. After Martin Luther nailed his theses to the church
door in Wittenberg, he translated the Bible from Latin to German, thereby
creating a common written language for German--speaking people. The same
was done for English speakers by those assigned a similar task by King
James I. So effective was this education that even today it unwittingly
shapes American speech patterns and rhythms. But it was
John Calvin, even more than Luther, who laid the spiritual groundwork
for universal learning. Because Calvinists insisted that faith be rooted
not in ritualistic practice but by direct encounter with God's Word, they
made reading a religious requirement. When Calvinists arrived in America,
John Harvard among them, they established seminaries and colleges expected
to sustain both the intellectual and spiritual well-being of their community.
In Europe,
elements within the Catholic church, most notably the Jesuits, responded
by making education the most effective centerpiece of the counter-Reformation.
So as late as the 17th century, education was still considered more the
domain of the spiritual than the temporal world. With the
rise of powerful nation-states Spain, England, France, eventually
Germany and Italy education became increasingly secularized, first
within universities, but gradually extending downward to include even
kindergarten. Those who sought to build powerful nation-states, most notably
Germany's iron chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, discovered that a secular
public school provided a remarkable tool for nation building. The forces
at work within the United States were not all that different from those
visible in Europe. Originally, learning the three R's was left to home
and church. But when Catholic immigrants from Ireland and Germany threatened
New England's Calvinist culture, Horace Mann persuaded the Massachusetts
legislature to compel all parents to see to their children's education.
Just as Bismarck wanted schools to unite a diverse German population,
public school advocates in the United States saw education as a vehicle
for achieving a uniform culture among an increasingly heterogeneous people.
In the last
century of the millennium, nation builders of all stripes, from Stalin
and Mussolini to Nehru, Sukarno, and the World Bank, have found state
control of education to their liking, not just as an engine for economic
development, but, more importantly, as a means for achieving political
integration. Today most everyone, whether liberal or conservative, democrat
or authoritarian, has concluded that the modern state requires universal,
compulsory, state-financed education. But now that
education has been securely tied to the power of the state, new issues
pose themselves for resolution. Why does the schoolchild no longer know
the century, much less the year, the printing press was invented or the
Reformation began? How can government sponsorship of education be reconciled
with liberty and diversity? Do governments have the zeal and conviction
that effective education seems to require? Or do state-controlled education
systems, like an unchallenged universal church, eventually become ossified
and corrupt? If so, will a new reformation challenge the dominance of
the state-controlled system? As the millennium
reaches its conclusion, public demand for choice and variety in education
has begun to increase. Are the reformers of today capable of creating
new institutions as powerful as those established by the reformers of
the 16th century? Or are state-controlled schools capable of mounting
a counter-reformation more effective than the one mounted by the 17th-century
papacy? Finding the answer to these questions may take a century, if not a millennium.
Joseph
Newhouse The achievements
in health and medical care over the course of the millennium and
especially during the past century have been remarkable. The most
basic measure of health is life expectancy: to what age can a person expect
to live? Life expectancy at birth has more than doubled during the millennium,
with most of this gain coming in the 20th century, as the accompanying
chart shows. Part of the
gain in life expectancy came from better nutrition and better sanitation
that came with rising incomes. Kilocalories available for work, for example,
rose by a factor of five in France between 1700 and 1975 and more than
doubled in England and Wales during the same period. Chronic malnutrition
was nearly universal three centuries ago; today the United States has
an epidemic of obesity. Part of the
gain in the 20th century came from improvements in medical care. In particular,
the development of vaccines, antibiotics, and recent pharmaceutical and
other clinical advances have played a role in not only extending life
but also improving its quality. The sharp gain in the 20th century in
life expectancy is consistent with Professor Lawrence Henderson's remark,
made early in the century, that it was not until 1910 or so that a random
patient with a random disease consulting a random doctor stood better
than a 50-50 chance of being helped. As an example
of how primitive medical treatment was three centuries ago, consider the
following description of the medical treatment of King Charles II of England
in 1685, when he fell unconscious while shaving in his bedroom: "The
following treatment was employed by the royal physicians. A pint of blood
was extracted from his right arm; then eight ounces from the left shoulder;
next an emetic, two physics, and an enema consisting of 15 substances.
Then his head was shaved and a blister raised on the scalp. To purge the
brain a sneezing powder was given; then cowslip powder to strengthen it.
Meanwhile more emetics, soothing drinks, and more bleeding; also a plaster
of pitch and pigeon dung applied to the royal feet. Not to leave anything
undone, the following substances were taken internally: melon seeds, manna,
slippery elm, black cherry water, extract of lily of the valley, peony,
lavender, pearls dissolved in vinegar, gentian root, nutmeg, and finally
40 drops of extract of human skull. As a last resort, bezoar stone was
employed. But the royal patient died." (MacKinney, as quoted in Somers
and Somers, 1961). Clearly if
this was the treatment of kings, medical care for the population 300 years
ago did little to prolong or improve the quality of life. In addition to the advances in human health, the last century has seen the development of public and private health insurance (or public provision) throughout the developed world, and in recent years in middle-income countries as well. The spread of insurance has prevented financial devastation from illness of many families worldwide and has obviously become more important as the cost of medical care has risen, a phenomenon of the latter half of the 20th century.
Cheryl L.
Dorsey MPP '92 Looking back
over the past century, it is clear that women have made significant strides
in terms of their health status. A woman's life expectancy increased from
48.3 years in 1900, to 79 years in 1996. A baby girl born today can expect
to be active and reasonably vigorous well into her 80s and even beyond.
And she will be taller too. While the average height for women was 5'3"
in 1921, it rose to 5'41/2" in 1997, in part, due to much improved
nutrition. In fact, by 2050 the average female height will be 5'7".
In addition, women continue to fill the ranks of medical professionals.
While only 14 percent of first-year medical students were women in 1971-72,
that percentage increased to 43 percent in 1995-96. Such progress
in women's health has paralleled and stems from the successes we've achieved
in other realms from the political and economic to the social.
Some of the clearest advances have occurred in women's health policy.
Over the years, women had been excluded from major studies on treatable
and preventable diseases affecting them. For example, a major National
Institutes of Health (NIH) study of health and fitness purposefully excluded
women on the premise that men were the norm. Even a clinical trial of
estrogen administered after heart attacks was conducted only in men. After
sustained criticism for its lack of research on women, however, in 1991,
NIH designed the Women's Health Initiative now the largest clinical
study ever undertaken. The dizzying improvements in technology that have fueled the economy and continue to restructure society will have a similar impact on women's health issues well into the next century and beyond. Nowhere will the significance of high-tech medical advances be more on display than in the area of assisted reproduction. Infertility continues to affect more and more American women, due in part to delayed childbearing and the aging of the baby boom generation. Millions of women have sought treatment for infertility since the world's first "test-tube" baby was born in 1978. Now, techniques such as cytoplasmic and blastocyst transfer and improvement in current procedures such as embryo freezing and intracytoplasic sperm injection promise new hope for infertile couples. No longer the stuff of sci-fi novels, these medical developments will unfold, no doubt, at a rapid rate, raising both expectations and ethical considerations for years to come.
Graham
T. Allison As we move
not just to a new century, but also to the third millennium, Russia stands
at the threshold of an authentically millennial event. On the current
schedule, in July 2000, Russian citizens will elect a new president, who
will succeed President Yeltsin in the first democratic, law-governed transfer
of power in its thousand-year history. History has
not been kind to Russians in their governments or governors. As Prime
Minister Primakov said to members of the Russian parliament last April,
(just before he was unceremoniously dismissed by President Yeltsin: "Your
lives will be bad, but not long." Hobbes's characterization of life
as "nasty, brutish, and short" has been the fact for centuries
of Russians. Today's Russia
traces its roots back to Kievan Russia on the eve of the last millennium.
In 988, Vladimir, the Prince of Kiev, adopted Christianity following his
marriage to a sister of the Emperor of Byzantium. After Vladimir's death,
fragmented principalities were overrun by the Mongols in the 13th century
and successively by other powerful groups in the vicinity (Teutonic knights,
Lithuanians, Poles, and Swedes) until Peter the Great finally and definitively
crushed the armies of Sweden at the Battle of Poltava in 1704. Consolidation
of the Russian Empire proved a lengthy and often bloody process, that
nonetheless expanded over three centuries to the west, south, and east
over thousands of miles of steppe toward the Baltic, Black, and
Caspian Seas, and the Pacific Ocean. The process was replete with the
overthrow of dynasties and rulers, encouragement of revolts and social
unrest, subjugation of the diverse non-Slavic peoples of the borderlands,
ruthless suppression of the Slavic peasantry, and brutal annexation of
territory from neighboring states. Ambitious Tsars and Tsarinas extracted
both blood and treasure from subject populations, at home and abroad,
for ventures of their choosing. The Bolshevik
coup in 1917 thrust Russia into its Soviet gulag. It proved to be an "evil
empire," as President Reagan rightly named it. Stalin killed more
Russians than did Hitler's Nazi soldiers in World War II. In 1986,
Mikhail Gorbachev became head of the Soviet Union. Recognizing that the
Communist system had reached a final phase of stagnation, Gorbachev sought
to revive Communist socialism with his calls for perestroika and democratization.
But by removing the existential fear that was, as one of Gorbachev's advisers
later observed, the "backbone of the Soviet system," Gorbachev
unwittingly unleashed events in Eastern Europe that swept away the Berlin
Wall; then the Warsaw Pact; and ultimately the Soviet Union itself. The
result: an unparalleled expansion of both freedom and absence of authority
for individuals across the former Soviet Union, and indeed Russia itself. In the fall
of 1991, after the failed coup of August, Boris Yeltsin declared independence
for a new democratic Russia. He launched an historic effort to transform
the Russian state and society to democracy and the market economy. As
with Gorbachev's earlier initiative, he attempted both marketization and
democratization simultaneously. With no realistic concept of how these
transformations would be effected, limited interest in the hard work of
day-to-day governance, and a penchant for divided, incompetent, and often
corrupt governments, Yeltsin succeeded primarily in holding on to power.
To his (and the Russian people's) credit, during his reign, Russians of
all stripes, Communists and democratics alike, came to accept the "democratic
presumption." By "democratic presumption" I mean the belief
that the best way to answer the question of who should govern within a
state is to hold an open, competitive election. Now in the
final year of the century, Russia finds itself in a critical "year
of elections." According to the Constitution, and to current plans,
Russians will vote for a new Duma in December 1999, and a new president
in July 2000. If Yeltsin presides over free democratic elections and then
transfers power to a democratically elected successor, he will deserve
to be remembered as the "founding father of Russian democracy." Americans' stake in Russia's passing this test go beyond the advantages of democracy itself. Of course, in the long run, a democratic Russia is likely to be more peaceful and a better partner for the West. But in the immediate future, as the past several years have shown, Yeltsin's time has passed. Whatever interest he had in governing has been overshadowed by the corruption of power. A new, democratically elected government of Russia, with a renewed commitment to free marketization and democratization, will offer new hope for something Russia has never had: namely, a benign government of minimum competence. Such a government would be competent enough to advance Russia's real interests, which, happily, coincide with the real interests of the West.
Julie
Boatright Wilson The major
change in family life over the last millennium has been in the evolution
of our thinking about children. Touring an art gallery illustrates this
change. For the first several hundred years of this millennium, children
were seldom pictured. When they did appear, they were depicted as miniature
adults, reflecting the prevailing view that once a child reached the age
of five or so and no longer needed constant care, he or she entered the
world of adults. Children were not unloved, but their low survival rate
discouraged an emotional attachment to infants on the part of adults.
And apprenticeships, the primary route to adult employment, discouraged
the development of strong parent-child bonds. By the 17th
century, the concept of a longer childhood was emerging. Although the
survival rate of children was still low, the educated classes of Europe
began to take greater intellectual interest in children, arguing that
they were both innocents in need of protection and flawed or weak beings
in need of training for adulthood. Reflecting this shift, the art of this
period begins to depict children alone or at the center of family portraits,
often wearing clothing distinct from that of adults. At the time, we see
a greater recognition of the family's responsibility for the moral and
spiritual education of children and the emergence of educational institutions
to convey other lessons. By the mid-19th
century, middle-class children in the United States under 14 had lost
their economic utility. And by the 1930s, compulsory education and child
labor laws removed working-class children from the labor force as well.
As historian Viviana Zelizer once noted, we observe during this period
the transformation of the economic and sentimental value of children and
track the emergence of the "economically 'worthless' but emotionally
'priceless' child."1 Later, the extended period
of adolescence emerged. Yet, during
this period of shifting perspectives, very little was known about how
children develop intellectually or emotionally. In the last half of the
19th century, we have made enormous leaps in our understanding of child
development. And in the last several years, brain research has brought
us even further, leading us to understand, among other things, that the
quality of care a child receives in the early years has not only emotional
and intellectual, but also physiological consequences. What will
the next millennium bring? Certainly it will bring continued growth in
our understanding of how children grow and develop and what they need
to mature into capable, caring adults. What will families be like? That
is difficult to guess, though we can make some assumptions. Despite progress
in cloning and fertilization, almost all children are likely to be conceived
and born in the traditional way. Sex is just too much fun. Two-adult households,
with relationships to extended families, are likely to survive because
raising children is hard work. It will continue to be harder on average
for lone parents to provide the emotional, financial, and other resources
that two parents of whatever sex can provide. The real question is, as
we learn more about what children need, will we have the political will
to act on that knowledge. 1 As quoted in Michael Katz, In the Shadow of the Poorhouse. Basic Books: New York, 1986, p. 116.
Robert
D. Putnam In a number
of deep respects, the challenges facing American society at the end of
the 19th century foreshadowed those that we face in our own time. Almost
exactly a century ago, America had also just experienced a period of dramatic
technological, economic, and social change that rendered obsolete a significant
stock of social capital. In the three
or four decades after the Civil War, the Industrial Revolution, urbanization,
and massive waves of immigration transformed American communities. Millions
of Americans left family and friends behind on the farm, when they moved
to Chicago or Milwaukee or Pittsburgh, and millions more left community
institutions behind in a Polish shtetl or an Italian village, when they
moved to the Lower East Side or the North End. Americans
at the end of the 19th century were divided by class, ethnicity, and race,
much as we are today, although today's dividing lines differ in detail
from those of a century ago (as Asians and Hispanics, for example, have
replaced Jews and Italians as targets of discrimination). Even more evocative
of our own social dilemmas were debates about the effects of the transportation
and communications revolutions on traditional community bonds. The railroad
and rural-free delivery and mail-order firms, and (somewhat later) the
automobile and chain stores disrupted local commerce and threatened place-based
social connections. Sears & Roebuck, Montgomery Ward, the A&P, and Woolworth's
were the counterparts to today's WalMart and Amazon.com. While reactionary
romantics mused about a return to a smaller, simpler, pastoral age, Progressives
were too practical to be attracted by that appeal. They admired the virtues
of the past but understood that we could not go back. The Industrial Age,
despite its defects, had made possible a material prosperity that was
an essential precondition for civic progress. The issue was not "modernity,
yes or no?" but rather "how to reform our institutions and adapt
our habits in this new world to secure the enduring values of our tradition?"
One striking
feature of the revitalization of civic life in America in the last years
of the 19th century was a veritable "boom" in association building.
Social clubs were not new to American life, but community histories regularly
note their proliferation in this period. A so-called "club movement"
swept across the land in the late 19th century, emphasizing self-help
and amateurism. New handbooks were published on "how to establish"
a boys' club or a women's club. College fraternities and sororities expanded
rapidly in the 1880s and 1890s. Looking back
from the doorstep of the 21st century, it is hard to imagine a time without
Boy Scouts, but a century ago it must have seemed fanciful that the 20th
century equivalent of Tom Sawyer's gang on the Mississippi sandbar would
involve beanies, merit badges, and the Scout's oath. Nevertheless, institutions
like the Boy Scouts provided a new and successful forum for youthful community
building. So, too, some solutions to today's civic deficit may seem initially
preposterous, but we should be wary of straining our civic inventiveness
through conventional filters. The specific reforms of the Progressive
Era are no longer appropriate for our time, but the practical, enthusiastic
idealism of that era and its achievements should inspire
us. Our challenge
now is to reinvent the 21st century equivalent of the Boy Scouts or the
settlement house or the playground or Hadassah. What we must create may
well look nothing like the institutions Progressives invented a century
ago, just as their inventions were not carbon copies of the earlier, small-town
folkways whose passing they mourned. We need to be as ready to experiment
as the Progressives were. Willingness to err and then correct our
aim is the price of success in social reform. The above piece is an excerpt from Bowling Alone: Decline and Renewal of the American Community by Robert D. Putnam, forthcoming in May 2000, from Simon and Schuster. Journalism
Marvin
Kalb Two hundred
years ago, as the 18th century slipped into the 19th, journalism in America
was a new and essentially partisan activity. Congress financed the one
newspaper of record; the others were financed by politicians and parties,
and they rarely wandered off the official reservation, except when, on
instruction, they ripped into an opposition politician. Thomas Jefferson
felt that editorial sting, as did Andrew Jackson 25 years later. All this
might have seemed quite odd, since the Constitution had spoken proudly
of a free press, performing the role of a watchdog on the excesses of
all official power, fearlessly criticizing both sides of any political
argument. In this spirit, James Madison wrote: "A popular government
without popular information...is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy;
or perhaps both." That was the laudable theory; the practice was
somewhat different, determined as much by the philosophical concept of
a free press as by economic and technological factors that shaped the
operation of a free press. For example, the "penny press" of
the 1830s lowered the price and thus popularized the American newspaper,
adding such features as advertisements and gossip. The wireless of the
1840s rapidly spread the news, however it was defined, from state to state.
Newspapering became a good business. One hundred
years ago, as the 19th century blasted its way into the 20th, a "new
journalism" emerged, reflecting the economic vitality and growth
of the country itself. A serious press covered "all the news that's
fit to print," as the new publisher of The New York Times,
Adolph Ochs, stated, but the tabloid press, filled with gossip, sensational
and often fabricated stories of murder, and governmental mismanagement,
dominated the highly competitive market and prospered. Soon newsreels
and radio added to the zealous pursuit of profit, and journalism became
not only a good business but also a booming business. The depression
of the 1930s, the horrors of World War II, the dropping of nuclear bombs
on Japan, and the tensions of the Cold War imposed a degree of restraint
and responsibility on the press. In time "press" seemed too
confining a word to describe the new "media" world of global
corporations owning vast empires of information, based on television,
cable, computers, and, finally, the Internet. The "new news"
utterly transformed the ethics and culture of press and politics; and
when the Cold War collapsed in the early 1990s, all restraints seemed
suddenly to be lifted and journalists returned to the frivolous mores
of earlier times, spending endless hours of TV time and devoting endless
columns of newspaper print to O.J. Simpson's trial, Princess Diana's death,
and President Bill Clinton's private life. Tabloids triumphed over more
traditional forms of journalism. There seemed no bottom to the depths
to which modern journalism could plunge in its pursuit of profit, ratings,
buzz, and glitz at the very same time, ironically, that its awesome technological
reach provided new and exciting vistas and information to people who normally
would have been cut off from these opportunities. Now, as the
21st century beckons, the free press of America faces perhaps its greatest
challenge since Madison's time how to survive the age of mega-media
conglomerates while retaining its historical commitment to standards of
objectivity, detachment, and responsible criticism. It is clearly going
to be very difficult. TV journalists have become celebrities, often more
famous than the people they cover. A certain arrogance has settled on
the craft, leading to a growing, perceptible disconnect between the journalist
and the public. People and popular causes are increasingly defined by
their degrees of skepticism and cynicism towards governmental authority.
In 1960, considerably more than 70 percent of the American people "trusted"
their government; now the percentage has dropped to 29 percent. Conglomerates
have a greater devotion to the bottom line than to the common good. Juries
are increasingly coming in with decisions that are critical of press practices. At this time, there is little evidence to suggest that these trends will turn around and better times will surface on the near horizon. Congress may be tempted to legislate press constraints, which would be tragic and probably unconstitutional. But none of this gloom is carved into stone. People make their own history. They must demand a better press performance. They may get it.
Jane
Mansbridge The "second
wave" of feminism, which took off in the United States in l967, had
to happen. The female
labor force had been slowly creeping up from 25 percent in 1930, to 35
percent in l960, to almost 45 percent in l970. (By now it is 60 percent.)
Attitudes were changing too, but only slowly. In l968, only about half
of the American population said "yes" to the survey question,
"If your party nominated a woman for president, would you vote for
her if she were qualified for the job?" This was a lot better than
the first time the question was asked, in l935, when 34 percent said "yes,"
but it was not a sea change. By the l960s,
more women were finding that the marriages they expected to last for life
were ending in divorce. Women were getting more formal education. But
when middle-class women graduated from college, they found that some public
colleges, universities, and professional schools still had legal quotas
restricting the number of women admitted, some businesses still had dual
pay schedules for men and women performing the same job, and most newspapers
advertised jobs in two sections, male and female. Even at Harvard, women
were barred from Lamont Library. The women's
movement acted like an earthquake, releasing tectonic plates that had
been building up strain. Demonstrations, consciousness-raising groups,
and new newspapers, magazines, and books began a process of thinking in
new ways. The campaign for the ERA took the issues into middle America.
The issues reached across class and race. In l972, 67 percent of black
women and 35 percent of white women told the Harris survey that they supported
women's liberation groups. The world
has not been the same since. In the United States, institutions, laws,
and patterns of everyday interaction began to change to meet the demands
of so many women. By l994, 89 percent of all Americans said they would
vote for a woman president. Men began to accept responsibility for child
care. In Europe, patterns changed differently depending on the country.
The Scandinavian countries adapted quickly to the many economic and social
demands for equality that fit into the framework of the welfare state.
Today those countries have the best arrangements for parents who want
to leave the workforce to take care of their young children, though they
lag behind in concern for sexual harassment. The French have some of the
best daycare in the world, as the political left and right came together
in their concerns. In other parts of the world, women are either demanding
changes or subtly bringing about changes without making overt demands,
in areas that range from setting up battered women's shelters to arranging
micro-credit. Ever since hunter-gatherer societies first evolved on this planet perhaps a hundred thousand years ago women have been excluded, or almost excluded, from decisions that we would now call "political." Major religions and philosophies have assigned women a lesser role in religious practice, collective decisions, and sometimes even in the human race itself. In the next millennium, I am fairly sure that this inequality which until now has lasted as long as the history of humanity will come to an end. And not a minute too soon.
Jeffrey
D. Sachs In our Gilded
Age, the poorest of the poor are nearly invisible. Seven hundred million
people live in the 42 so-called Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs),
where a combination of extreme poverty and financial insolvency mark them
for a special kind of despair and economic isolation. They escape our
notice almost entirely, unless war or an exotic disease breaks out. The situation
in these poor countries has become intolerable, especially at a time when
the rich countries are bursting with new wealth and scientific prowess.
Looking at basic nutrition levels, we see evidence of outright declines
in caloric consumption in 10 HIPC countries in recent years. In nine Sub-Saharan
African countries, average caloric intake does not even reach 2,000 calories
per day. During this same period, the average resident in the wealthy
G-7 countries (Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, and the
United States) consumed roughly 3,300 calories per day. Thirteen Sub-Saharan
HIPC countries showed declines in life expectancy during the 1990s, partly
due to the AIDS epidemic, which is ravaging the continent. The time
has arrived for a fundamental re-thinking of the strategy for cooperation
between rich and poor, with the avowed aim of helping the poorest of the
poor back on to their own feet to join the race for human betterment.
Four steps could change the shape of our global community. First, the
rich and poor need to learn to talk together. The starting point is for
the world's democracies, rich and poor, to get together in a quest for
common action. Once again, the rich G-8 (including Russia) met in 1999
without the presence of the developing world. This kind of rich-country
summit should be the last. Next year should bring together both rich and
poor. A G-16 for the new millennium should include old and new democracies
such as Brazil, India, Korea, Nigeria, Poland, and South Africa. Second, rich
and poor countries should direct their urgent attention to the mobilization
of science and technology for poor-country problems. The rich countries
should understand that the International Monetary Fund and World Bank
are by themselves unequipped for that challenge. The specialized UN agencies
have a great role to play, especially if they also act as a bridge between
the activities of advanced-country and developing-country scientific centers.
They will be able to play that role, however, only after the United States
pays its debts to the United Nations and only if the unthinking American
hostility to the United Nations system is ended. In addition,
we will need new and creative institutional alliances. A Millennium Vaccine
Fund, which guarantees future markets for malaria, tuberculosis, and AIDS
vaccines, would be the right place to start. The vaccine-fund approach
is administratively straightforward, desperately needed, and within our
technological reach. Similar efforts to merge public and private science
activities will be needed in agricultural biotechnology as well. Third, just
as knowledge is becoming the undisputed centerpiece of global prosperity
(and lack of it, the core of human impoverishment), the global regime
on intellectual property rights requires a new look. The United States
prevailed upon the world to toughen patent codes and cut down on intellectual
piracy. But now transnational corporations and rich-country institutions
are busy patenting everything from the human genome to rainforest biodiversity.
The poor will be ripped off unless some sense and equity is introduced
into this runaway process. Moreover,
the system of intellectual property rights must balance the need to provide
incentives for innovation against the need of poor countries to get the
results of innovation. The more general issue of setting global rules
for the uses and development of new technologies especially the
controversial biotechnologies will again require global cooperation,
not the strong-arming of the few rich countries. Fourth, and
perhaps toughest of all, we need a serious discussion about long-term
funding for the international public goods necessary for HIPC countries
to break through to prosperity. The rich countries are willing to talk
about everything except money: money to develop new malaria, tuberculosis,
and AIDS vaccines; money to spur biotechnology research in food-scarce
regions; money to help tropical countries adjust to climate changes imposed
on them by the richer countries. The World Bank makes mostly loans, and
loans to individual countries at that. It does not fund global public
goods. America has systematically squeezed the budgets of UN agencies,
including such vital ones as the World Health Organization.
Technology
Jean
Camp The Internet
is frequently compared to the printing press, especially at the start
of the new millennium. The printing press changed the use and storage
of a critical input: information. Over the long term, the printing press
enabled innovation, quantification, and current information technology.
The digital
information revolution, enabled by the movabletype analog information
revolution, will once again change who we are, who we think we are, and
how we think about who we are. Yet the importance
of the discovery of information technology is often overlooked
considered an elite, first-world phenomenon. Electronic communities are
sometimes framed as the playgrounds for the leisure of those in the first
world. Yet, simultaneously, development programs and domestic governments
focus on building traditional community centers (e.g., health care, education,
postal centers). This contrasts with digitally connected community centers
that offer instant connectivity across the globe, with stores and libraries
that offer everything but running water. Health information, agriculture
information, and economic information will reduce wasteful practices.
Does this matter? Imagine if every parent on the planet knew how to prevent
infant death from dehydration. Certainly the claims of world health are
even more extreme than claims of world peace, but the point is, even in
the absence of wealth, information matters. The technology
is becoming affordable for every community. In Japan, schoolgirls buy
"Pipi," a $30, pretty, little, wireless, and Internet-ready
cellular device. No doubt, such an explosion in cheap technology will
lead to the same concerns as cheap reading materials, including the popularity
of digital Comstockery. The connectivity
of the rich, first-world children and the poor children will change their
communities and their concepts of themselves. It will change the boundaries
of communities and the expectation of personal boundaries. When the communities
are connected at the center, where is the boundary? The observation
that half the people in the world have never made a phone call is often
presented as argument that connectivity is broadly irrelevant. Strangely
enough, the obvious print corollary, that illiteracy exists on a vast
global scale, is not understood to imply that the written word is not
relevant. Similarly, the lack of empowerment over the digital word does
not imply that the electronic word is irrelevant. Hundreds
of years after the arrival of the printing press, the concept of global
literacy, with children belonging in school, is a global ideal. The importance
of the written word is accepted. While in many places the written word
may seem a tragic, ironic joke, in fact, the acceptance of the importance
of the written word can extend the power of the word to the darkest corners.
Amnesty International sends only words to stop the torturer from further
harming the victim. The world
accepts that the written word defines the world. The digital world is
frightening because it will redefine the world. It is not the access to
digital communities that is the true misspent luxury of the first world,
but rather the time spent to decide that the digital word matters to the
unwired. Because of the increase in efficiency inherent to the information
technologies, reaction time is decreased. There are not centuries to squander.
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